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Full-Text Articles in Law

Guide To The Law Quadrangle, University Of Michigan Law School Jan 2009

Guide To The Law Quadrangle, University Of Michigan Law School

About the Buildings

The first law department lecture was delivered to University of Michigan students on October 5, 1859. Since then, the Law School has become on of the outstanding centers for legal education in the world. Its greatness derives from the exceptional faculty and students who have been drawn to Ann Arbor. Since 1933, the unique design and beauty of the Law Quadrangle have provided an incomparable environment in which members of this community of scholars have developed their talents.

Construction of the Quadrangle took more than a decade. The result, reflecting the exquisite craft of artisans in stone, glass, wood, and …


University Of Michigan Law School Self-Guided Walking Tour, University Of Michigan Law School Jan 2007

University Of Michigan Law School Self-Guided Walking Tour, University Of Michigan Law School

About the Buildings

A brochure providing direction for a self-guided walking tour of the University of Michigan Law School.


'A Time To Build' - William W. Cook And His Architects: Edward York And Philip Sawyer, Margaret A. Leary Dec 2002

'A Time To Build' - William W. Cook And His Architects: Edward York And Philip Sawyer, Margaret A. Leary

Articles

The following narrative outlines the role of donor William W. cook and the architects who built the Law Quadrangle 70 years ago. The report is excerpted and adapted from 94 Law Library Journal 395-425 (2002-26). The author is director of the University of Michigan Law School's Law Library.


The University Of Michigan Law School Walking Tour, University Of Michigan Law School Jan 1995

The University Of Michigan Law School Walking Tour, University Of Michigan Law School

About the Buildings

A brochure designed to direct a walking tour, as well as give historical information for the buildings, the architecture, and to a lesser degree, the people who made the Law Quadrangle what it is.


Professional Education Then And Now: Law, Elizabeth Gaspar Brown Jan 1987

Professional Education Then And Now: Law, Elizabeth Gaspar Brown

Other Publications

The Law Department, the third of those mandated by the state statute of 1837, commenced to function on October 3, 1859. In the morning the three-member law faculty met and elected James Valentine Campbell, an Associate Justice of the Michigan Supreme Court, as its dean. In the afternoon, Campbell delivered an address "On the Study of Law" to a crowd of faculty, students, and visitors in the Ann Arbor Presbyterian Church.

The next morning, 90 students - 60 from Michigan, 29 from other states of the Union, and one from Canada - assembled for the first lecture in the prescribed …


Thirty Years Of Legal Education, Allan F. Smith Jun 1964

Thirty Years Of Legal Education, Allan F. Smith

Michigan Law Review

A generation of law students has moved through the University of Michigan Law Quadrangle since its dedication on June 13, 1934. The prophecy quoted above has been fulfilled, although the process of its fulfillment has not ended and will not end, for the process of law is indeed "an endless 'becoming.' " Despite the difficulties of carving segments from that which is essentially continuous and unbroken, it seems appropriate to pause at this thirtieth anniversary of the Quadrangle and to observe the segment of time which separates the dedication and the present day.


The Law School 1947-1948, E. Blythe Stason Nov 1947

The Law School 1947-1948, E. Blythe Stason

Michigan Law Review

The academic year 1947-1948 opened with the largest student enrollment in the history of the University of Michigan Law School, overflowing the Law Quadrangle and making the year notable for large classes and keen competition. The 417 beginning students, 329 second-year students, 345 seniors, 10 candidates for advanced degrees in law, and 6 special students, all add up to a grand total of 1107 prospective lawyers. This figure compares with an enrollment of 956 at a corresponding time in the fall semester a year ago, and 641 in the pre-war year 1940-1941.